'Nothing But the Truth' among new DVD releases

Published: Friday, May 1, 2009 6:53 p.m. MDT
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 

This week's new-to-DVD movies are led by a newspaper yarn that might have given "State of Play" a run for its money if it had gone to theaters instead of straight to video.

"Nothing But the Truth" (Sony, 2009; R for language, sex, violence; $24.96). This piece of dramatic fiction is based loosely on the Valerie Plame scandal, when a CIA operative was outed by a newspaper story and a journalist went to jail for contempt because she wouldn't name a source.

The film's focus is primarily on a reporter (Kate Beckinsale), who writes an investigative piece for a fictional Washington, D.C., paper that names a covert agent (Vera Farmiga). This prompts a federal investigator (Matt Dillon) to quickly find a judge who will send her to jail if she won't reveal her source. And, of course, she won't.

So the paper hires a high-profile defense attorney (Alan Alda) but it becomes a prolonged jail stretch for which the reporter pays a very high price. Writer-director Rod Lurie, a former journalist, also tosses in a tragic killing — and a twist ending that you will find either inspired or insipid.

Story continues below

Alda's performance is a real stand-out, but all the actors are in fine form, to include Angela Basset, Noah Wyle and David Schwimmer. And the film is an entertaining mix of conventional melodrama and discussions of First Amendment issues.

Extras: widescreen, deleted scenes, audio commentary, featurette, trailers

"What Doesn't Kill You" (Sony, 2009; R for violence, language, sex, drugs; $24.96). Although this is "a true story," the plot about a husband and father who has trouble breaking the cycle of his life of crime comes off as fairly routine.

The saving grace is provided by a bevy of rich performances, led by Mark Ruffalo as the aforementioned career criminal, Amanda Peet as his long-suffering wife and Ethan Hawke as his best pal, who is no help when Ruffalo tries to go straight.

Extras: widescreen, deleted/alternate scenes, audio commentary, featurette, trailers

"Hotel for Dogs" (Dreamworks/Nickelodeon, 2009, PG, $29.99). Emma Roberts and Jake T. Austin are siblings in foster care who hide their dog in an abandoned hotel and gradually take in other strays until the dogs take over their lives. Predictable kids comedy has its moments and some clever Rube Goldberg-style gadgetry in the hotel, but many of the gags fall flat, including the inevitable dog-doo gags, and Lisa Kudrow and Kevin Dillon seem ill-equipped comic foster parents. Don Cheadle lends occasional class as a social worker.

Recent comments

Who'd you think it was? Marshall Matt Dillon?

Mike | May 2, 2009 at 6:52 p.m.

Sorry...that is Matt Dillon, I got my Dillon's all mixed up...

Hero of Canton | May 2, 2009 at 1:36 p.m.

That's not Matt Dillion in the picture with Alan Alda.

Oh and wer?...

Hero of Canton | May 2, 2009 at 1:35 p.m.

Image
Yari Film Group

Matt Dillon, left, and Alan Alda star in a newspaper yarn "Nothing But the Truth."

previousnext

Latest comments

I don't understand people who want Mr. Smart to go away. What kind of person...

should insist on playing Notre Dame. Now that could be competetive!

Just where is BOISE STATE? Oh Yeah...it must be one of Obama's 57...

Just so there is no confusion, I am very happy with President Obama-- even...

Can you imagine what TCU would have done to Texas in that game Saturday...

TCU is better than Texas; of that I am convinced. The Texas/Bama game won't...

will show U what real speed is just like TCU did!

Thank You President Monson for a Great Christmas Message. Thanks also to...

Yes I did!!!!

Do all Utah Drivers think that they can stop on a dime? Let's all slow down...

Advertisements